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Fortnite's iOS / Android Ban And Epic's Apple / Google Lawsuit, Explained
#1
Here's everything we know about the removal of Fortnite: Battle Royale from the App Store and Google Play Store.

Fortnite has been removed from the iOS App Store and Android's Google Play Store, prompting developer Epic Games to sue Apple and Google. This is huge news, both because of the potential disruption to one of the world's biggest games
Fortnite's new season won't be playable on iOS or Android as of now--and because of the fundamental way in which Epic is trying to disrupt how these mobile app stores operate. You can find a full rundown and explanation of the story below. We will also continue to update it as it develops further.

What Happened to Fortnite on iOS And Android?
On August 13, Epic rolled out the Fortnite Mega Drop.
This consisted of two components. First, the price of V-Bucks--Fortnite's in-game currency, used to buy its popular skins, dances, and seasonal battle passes--was dropped by 20% on all platforms. This was a straight discount on PC, PS4, Xbox One, and Nintendo Switch, but in the versions of the game distributed through the iOS App Store and Google Play Store (there are other ways to get the game on Android) , it worked a little differently.

Why Was Fortnite Banned From The App Store And Google Play?

Apple and Google have banned Fortnite from their app stores. Lawsuits are involved. #FreeFortnite is trending. What exactly happened?

Epic Games, Apple, and Google are feuding over a move the Fortnite developer made without either mobile giant's approval, which resulted in Apple and Google banning Fortnite from the App Store and Google Play. If you've seen #FreeFortnite

trending on social media or caught that Nineteen Eighty-Fortnite video Epic posted, you're probably wondering what happened. Here's a quick breakdown.

What Did Fortnite Do To Make Apple And Google Mad?
On Thursday, August 13, Epic Games introduced its own direct, in-app payment system for Fortnite across all platforms. Called the Fortnite Mega Drop,  the new system implemented permanent discounts of up to 20% on V-bucks, Fortnite's in-game currency. On PC and console, this isn't a problem, but on mobile devices, things get a little more controversial.
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cradit gamespot.com[url=https://epicgames.com/site/en-US/fortnite-mega-drop-faq][/url]



#2
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Thanks for this!



#3
Doesn't android already allow sideloading?

Didn't fortnite originally launch outside outside the google play store?

Even though you can install apps and even full appstores on android, most apps still end up using google play anyway.



#4
Interesting, thank you for the explanation for what is going on with this and why it is happening.



#5
its looks very hard